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Hurricane Idalia ripping into Florida

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HURRICANE Idalia slammed into northwest Florida as an “extremely dangerous” Category 3 storm yesterday, buffeting coastal communitie­s with cascades of water as officials warned of “catastroph­ic” flooding in parts of the southern US state.

Authoritie­s described Idalia and its potentiall­y deadly high surging waters as a once-in-a-lifetime event for the area most affected, ordering mass evacuation­s.

The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said Idalia, which earlier raked western Cuba, was packing maximum sustained winds of approximat­ely 215km/h when it made landfall in Florida’s marshy Big Bend area.

The NHC said the storm came ashore near the community of Keaton Beach, as an “extremely dangerous Category 3 Hurricane, and warned of a possible disastrous storm surge of up to about five meters in some coastal areas.

Though Idalia lost strength as it moved inland towards Georgia, becoming a Category 1 storm, authoritie­s warned residents of the aftermath, and the dangers of high tide.

Unlike most other coastal regions in the state, Big Bend – a marshy area along the Gulf of Mexico – does not have barrier islands.

The NHC said water levels were more than six feet above normal in Cedar Key, a string of islands jutting into the Gulf, and warned that waters along the coast were “rising rapidly.”

Resident Shely Boivin, who manages the community’s Beach Front Motel, fled before the storm’s arrival, saying: “Everything is flooded. I’ve seen pictures of the tide coming in, the water is just – it’s everywhere,” she said, noting that high tide was still yet to come.

In the small coastal town of Steinhatch­ee about 20 miles south of Idalia’s landfall, streets were mostly deserted

and the main road was totally flooded.

In the Tampa Bay area, a major metropolit­an zone of about 3 million people, streets were submerged and flood waters swept across yards.

With the area still at low tide, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said that “the flooding that we’re experienci­ng now is nothing compared to what we’re going to see in a few hours.”

Just north in the city of Tarpon Springs, people waded, or even canoed, to safety as homes and apartments were inundated.

More than 278 000 customers in Florida and 52 000 in Georgia were without electricit­y, according to tracking website Poweroutag­e.us.

The White House said the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) had prepositio­ned emergency personnel and resources.

Florida Governor Ron Desantis had urged residents of 23 counties along Florida’s Gulf coast to evacuate and head to shelters or hotels outside the danger zones. The US presidenti­al candidate had warned the hurricane was on track to be the strongest to impact

the region in more than a century.

Meteorolog­ists are also pointing to a rare blue supermoon which could further raise tides above normal levels just as Idalia pounds the coastline.

Tampa Internatio­nal Airport and other regional airports closed, while flights were disrupted along the US East Coast as another hurricane, Franklin, churns in the Atlantic.

Several Florida ports were closed to vessel traffic as of Tuesday night, according to the US Coast Guard.

In Cuba, the storm flooded several communitie­s including parts of the capital Havana and knocked out power to about 200 000 people but there were no deaths reported.

The storm then moved out over the Gulf of Mexico, which scientists say is experienci­ng a “marine heat wave”, energizing Idalia’s winds as it raced towards Florida.

Record-breaking temperatur­es off the Florida coast are expected to amplify Atlantic storms this season, with scientists blaming human-caused climate change for the overall warming trend.

 ?? | Reuters ?? A COUPLE stand next to their apartment after the area flooded from Hurricane Idalia in Tarpon Springs, Florida, yesterday.
| Reuters A COUPLE stand next to their apartment after the area flooded from Hurricane Idalia in Tarpon Springs, Florida, yesterday.

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